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Sober

Columnist Katrina vanden Heuvel The Washington Post

Labor Long Intertwined with Civil Rights

Jens Manuel Krogstad USA Today
Though the unions held themselves up as civil rights advocates, white workers often saw their black counterparts as a threat because they competed for the same jobs. In response, black workers formed coalitions to change unions from within. The Coalition of Black Trade Unionists, for example, was founded in 1972. One union stood out when it came to opportunity and access for black workers: the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters with its significant black membership.

Strike Averted with Contract Settlement at UC

Larry Gordon Los Angeles Times
The agreement calls for an immediate 4.5% pay increase as a signing bonus and then across-the-board 3% raises annually through 2016, plus an additional 2% each year for many employees within certain longevity and pay categories, according to UC. The lower-wage workers will not have to pay any increases for some health insurance coverage.

Excessive Force

Quote of the Day - Corected - March 1, 2014 Los Angeles Times

Pro-Union Nissan Workers in Mississippi

JOSEPH B. ATKINS Labor South
This blog puts a spotlight on the labor activity in the U.S. South you don't read about elsewhere, always keeping it in context with what is going on nationally and internationally in the Global South as well. This blog also provides a historical and cultural (including music, literature, and art) perspective that takes into account the long, hard, and often bloody struggle workers have always had to wage whenever they tried to organize in this region